Martinez Gallery
New York
37 Greenpoint Avenue
WEB
Horror Vacui
dal 17/1/2003 al 15/2/2003
718 706 06 06
WEB
Segnalato da

Martinez Gallery


approfondimenti

Bama
Tyke Witnes
Antonio Zaya



 
calendario eventi  :: 




17/1/2003

Horror Vacui

Martinez Gallery, New York

The show attempts to open wider the continuous dialogue between graffiti art and the more universally accepted regular world of art, picking up where the show Noviembre Publico, at Martinez Gallery in November and also curated by Zaya, left off. At the same time, the current show takes a closer look at the phenomenon of graffiti itself, examining the now-universal movement from the roots up, from the early 1970s until tomorrow.


comunicato stampa

opening: jan 18 2003, 7 PM
after party: 10 PM - 4 AM

Martinez Gallery is pleased to announce “Horror Vacui,” a post-utopic, post-nomadic, neo-nihilistc, dual artist project, featuring the work of graffiti artists Bama and Tyke Witnes, running until February 15. The show, curated by Antonio Zaya and designed by Marleen Kaptein, brings the forces, talents and visions of two very different artists -- exponents of different decades, coasts and styles – together in a joint effort to penetrate the margins of that elusive concept, underground, as it’s evolved over the past three decades.

“Horror Vacui” attempts to open wider the continuous dialogue between graffiti art and the more universally accepted “regular” world of art, picking up where the show “Noviembre Publico,” at Martinez Gallery in November and also curated by Zaya, left off. At the same time, the current show takes a closer look at the phenomenon of graffiti itself, examining the now-universal movement from the roots up, from the early 1970s until tomorrow.

At the roots is New York graffiti legend and master of the form, Bama, who first appeared in 1972. Approaching 50 years of age, the artist is still at work, producing startling canvases with an intricate cellular organization, without beginning and without end, as if some mysterious, even dangerous, fragment of a greater, growing whole. Bama’s works approximate a kind of genetic code spelled out in color and borderline, a new kind of alphabet, with a strange and seemingly indecipherable backbone, like some Ur-sprache, predecessor of language, like that discussed by Jacob Boehme in the 16th century.

The Bronx-based Bama is often considered a mad scientist, or proto-Edison, of graffiti history, inventing the use of quotation marks, integration of music within the letters, and the idea of putting cartoon characters in graffiti art. He was a founding member of the United Graffiti Artists in the mid-1970s.

Meanwhile, sprouting from the greenest, newest branches of the tree is Tyke Witnes, half the age of his counterpart, from Los Angeles and with Vietnamese roots. His studio paintings appear to be more or less orthodox (at least within the limits the term describes), crowded with references to commercial comics that distinguish his work, and complement his sculptures of warriors, all exploring the urge to escape through fantasies of the future and the postgalactic or medieval and the postmillennial.

This work appears to be in stark contrast to his urban, or street, art, but the two do not negate nor clash – the same unmistakable self-assured and graceful talent is evident throughout. Indeed, his works on canvas and in three dimensions, taken as an integral part of all Tyke Witnes' work, don't appear to be at all at odds with the current tally of his interjections in the plenary conference of street language. His work debates animation and commercial design, popularizing monochromes and uplifting the comic art form. Tyke is a member of the notorious graff crew, AWR (Angels Will Rise) as well as NASA (No Art Survives After), and is considered the inventor of the Hybrid form, mixing styles learned from other artists and making them his own; additionally Tyke Witnes is considered the precursor of the union between writing and phenomenon.

In spite of the obvious differences of culture and generation, Bama and Tyke Witnes are united by what appears to be a militant phobia of the vacuum, of empty space. Both are children, though at opposite ends of the spectrum, of the same all-encompassing saturation of the senses; both are mortal foes of the conventional discourse of “established” and “accepted” art forms in the second half of the 20th century – which itself can only appear to be on its knees before the dissonant abundance of these two poets of the city walls.

For more information and media queries: Blanca Martinez at 718-706-0606, blanca@martinezgallery.com

Gallery Hours: 1 PM - 7 PM Thursday - Sunday.

MARTINEZ gallery
37 Greenpoint Avenue
Brooklyn, New York 11222
t 718 706 0606

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dal 21/6/2006 al 2/9/2006

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